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Wednesday workflow

My new BW post processing video tutorial is now ready for download, for a limited time get all 9 videos for the price of 1

  

Video 1 My Complete BW Workflow

Video 2 Mastering BW Conversions

Video 3 Fine Art Architecture

Video 4 Fine Art Landscape

Video 5 Fine Art Seascape

Video 6 Fine Art Cityscape

Video 7 Fine Art Long Exposure

Video 8 Fine Art Street

Video 9 Minimal Photography

  

also included are my photoshop files and post processing notes!

An extremely comprehensive post processing tutorial for fine art BW photography

www.vulturelabs.photography/product-page/b-w-post-process...

Part of the set bilderordner album: "res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf entwurfarbeit überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme rückschau vorschau" 365-days project 2: construction weaving loom, mounting mirror background, bau Webstuhl. Montage Spiegel Hintergrund, Unterlegung // Nonsense Analogie schuh werkstatt weben haus bauen torte backen auflauf kochen // Szenen ohne Ehe, selbst ist die Frau

 

used photos:

DMC-GH3 - P1100035 - 2015-11-09

DMC-GH3 - P1100036 - 2015-11-09

DMC-GH3 - P1100041 - 2015-11-09

DMC-GH3 - P1100044 - 2015-11-09 #variation #draughtsman #problem #leiermann #leier #improvisation #raster #handwerk #chrysalis #chrysalides #chrysalises #haushalt #analogie #haus #bauen #baustelle #hausbauen #weben #leere #lehre #sinnlos #falsch #widerlegen #beweis #beweisführung #gegenbeweis #inhalt #erklärung #erläuterug #loom #webstuhl #bau #construction #öffentlich #rede #einblick #anblick #ausblick #weiß #white #bunt #work #arbeit #profession #beruf #handwerk #theater #diagramm #schaubild #linie #line #linear #trash #müll #mist #abfall #recycling #upcycling #idee #konzept #überlegung #gedanke #napkin #serviette #unterlegung #herbstlicht #herbst #autumn #licht #light #sonnig #sunny #sun #sonne #schatten #shadow #arbeitslicht #gold #silber #private #privat #privateness #metapher #symbol #lampion #green #grün #bilderzyklus #tapestry #tapisserie #tapis #wandteppich #küche #kitchen #bildwirkerei #bildteppich #textilkunst #carpet #teppich #rug #schatten #shadow #szene #scene #review #preview #kaleidoskop #kaleidoscope #heute #neu #neuer #neuest #beobachtung #view #blick

My favorite personal photo of a male ruby-throated hummingbird from the Fall 2005 migration through Houston, Texas. I used a new workflow technique on the original photo

 

'View Large On Black

München.

 

Zenza Bronica ETR.

Fuji Velvia 100.

Hybrid workflow.

Today working on blur and camera raw touches.

 

Next week a full stream dedicated to hair to wrap up the series

 

Video available as well as previous workflow videos

 

www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ-uhYr4WopyhYZhA1Iv7SA

 

bees in springtime

For todays perspective, I “cooked” this one with a completely new workflow by creating a 32 bit depth file in CS6, and then processing that in camera raw. I’ll share that soon here on another post or video soon!

 

More on the blog at www.MDSimages.com

 

scratchy black

workflow "kaplun-art"

ODC Theme: Work

 

Even though currently I don't make my main income from photography I hope someday I will.

1. Enderezado de la imagen, he tomado como referencia los pilares de la casa, su linea vertical

2. Correccion perfil de lente, aberracion cromatica y correccion de perspectiva automatica

3 Equilibrio de blancos temperatura 5900 matiz +6

4. Ajustes basicos

Exposicion -0.65

Contraste +24

Iluminaciones -100

Sombras +79

Blancos +63

Negros -6

Claridad +30

Intensidad +18

Saturacion +8

 

HSL TONO

Rojo +13

Naranjas -26

Amarillos +29

Verdes +12

Aguamarinas +13

Azules +28

Purpuras +8

 

HSL SATURACION

Rojo +4

Naranjas +17

Amarillos +8

Verdes -4

Aguamarinas -26

Azules +52

 

HSL LUMINANCIA

Rojo +14

Naranjas -32

Amarillos -13

Verdes -33

Aguamarinas -54

Azules -59

Purpuras -38

 

CURVAS

Parametrico

Iluminaciones -6

Claros +9

Oscuros -6

Sombras +8

Punto Rojo

He levantado muy levemente los tonos medios a rojo

Verde

Las iluminaciones las he bajado muy levemente a magenta y las sombras muy levemente hacia verde

Azul

Las iluminaciones he bajado bastante a amarillo, los tonos medios lo he bajado a amarillo levemente al igual que sombras.

RGB

Solo he dado mas luz pero muy levemente a las sombras

 

Filtro radial para cielo

temperatura -6

Exposicion -0.25

Contraste 25

Iluminaciones -35

Sombras +32

Blancos +7

Negros +1

Claridad +31

Saturacion 14

 

Filtro radias para tierra

Temperatura +2

Matiz -3

Exposicion +0.1

Contraste +26

Iluminaciones -65

Sombras +57

Blancos +22

Negros +6

Claridad 15

Saturacion +14

 

ENFOQUE

Cantidad 62

Radio 0.8

Detalle 32

Mascara 43

 

...Kittys Beach in autumn, Booderee NP

 

Toyo-View 45CF, Nikkor-W 135mm, FPP Super Green X-Ray, stand developed Pyrocat HD

workflow: Nikon D600, RawVision, PixlrExpress, Snapseed on an SamsungTab3 (For Tryout in HDR Mode with Snapseed)

"Don't bother just to be better than your contemporaries or predecessors. Try to be better than yourself."

~William Faulkner

 

So I've been to the top of this parking garage before, and I've taken a shot similar to this one before. However, the last one I took was in landscape with the 18mm kit lens. This is a portrait view with a 16mm wide angle, and I think it gives a pretty cool view down Liberty Ave.

 

As for the technical details, this is a 7 RAW exposure HDR processed in HDR Efex. I started with the preset Vibrant Details and Colors, again, upped the texture and black levels, reduced the saturation, used the HDR effect "Crisp" at 40%. In CS5 I added a contrast level, a blue layer for the sky and the buildings and a yellow layer for the buildings. A highlights layer was used to bring back some of the harsh light at the end of the road. I also ran this through Nik Output Sharpener. All sliders at 50% except for texture, which I moved to 150.

 

I hope that you all have a great weekend!!!

  

I don't mind invitations, but please no big, shiny, flashing, glitter graphics, they will be deleted. Also, please contact me if you would like to use my pictures for any reason, as all rights are reserved. Thanks!

 

Follow me on Twitter

 

My Facebook Page - HDR Exposed Become a fan!!!

 

My blog: HDR Exposed

 

Post Processing Workflow

Sun flare tutorial

Regular HDR tutorial

 

By the bronze age tumulus "Kung Björns Hög" (King Björn's Pile") in Uppsala, Sweden.

 

Canon EOS M.

Tamron 18-270. 65 mm. f/8,0, ISO 400, 1/500.

Workflow: LR-PS-CEP-SEP-Tony Kuyper's LM.

 

20150601-_MG_8661-Edit

New photoshop workflow based on some ideas from Vermeer's painting techniques.

 

Compare with www.flickr.com/photos/dougr/9511082879

 

Best viewed *big* using a color corrected browser (Safari or Firefox). Check out my best stuff at www.pacificaphoto.net and follow my new work on twitter @doug_r

Location: Inishcarra Dam - Inishcarra - Cork - Munster - Ireland - IE - Europe - EU

 

A Bee Right? No, actually it is a Wasp. I did not know until I research seeking for the scientific name of it, I could not find the exactly stripes pattern to 100% match the species but I learnt that it is a Wasp not a bee. Cool isn't?

 

Could someone help ID it please?

 

Photographer: Mark

 

Photoshop Camera Raw Filter

A revisit of the XF90 multi-stitch pano of the other day with improved workflow...

 

"Quite a large file! This is a stitched panorama, just to show that the XF90 can in fact truly do wide angle landscapes! Yes it's a do everything lens (macro test pending).

 

I don't really do "classic wide vistas" with my camera - I've been in the mountains too many years and seen too many stunning corners of the UK / world mountains to consider capturing the entirety of a view in an image...that said...if I can use the XF90 for that purpose then the detail it will capture will be sublime.

 

The light on Saturday evening was sublime. I actually missed the best clouds (playing cricket with Lewis!) but was happy with capturing these. This was the view from the campervan at Castlerigg Hall campsite - a gem of a site.

 

I stitched the photo using Affinity Photo - a very cost effective and powerful alternative to the Adobe machine.

 

I've not really mastered the workflow yet so there's a few things I'll improve on with #2, so please ignore any blown highlights etc etc.

 

I hope this image captures some of the beauty of the scene I witnessed."

I’m often asked how I create my AI photography images—especially by those using the same tools but getting very different results. Here’s a brief tutorial outlining my process for crafting refined AI visuals:

1.Start with a Line Sketch

Create a clean line drawing of your subject. Scan it at a minimum of 300 dpi for optimal clarity—this resolution consistently yields the best results.

2.Recover with AI Photo Tool

Use an AI photo recovery tool to transform your sketch into a base image. I typically select the “Severe” setting to maximize structural fidelity.

3.Enhance with AI Image Tool

Apply an AI image enhancement tool to refine detail. I prefer Version 2 with a 6-pass setting and the “Photography” filter for depth and realism.

4.Retouch for Precision

Use a photography retouch tool to eliminate blemishes, wrinkles, extra fingers, or other AI-generated artifacts. Zoom in closely to catch subtle errors. The lasso tool offers excellent control once mastered.

5.Smooth with Light Enhancement

Apply a light-setting enhancement to correct any smearing from the retouch phase. This step improves lighting, restores clarity, and sharpens the final image.

6.Finalize with Branding

Add your watermark or company symbol to complete the piece and protect your creative identity.

 

Workshop "workflow/Photoshop/Lightroom"

Vrijdag 21 september

10:00-13:00

50.00

 

Nog 2 plekken vrij voor deze zeer informatieve workshop aanstaande vrijdag.

 

Veel tips en technieken voor een snelle en professionele retouch workflow.

 

Werken met kleurkanalen, unieke tints zelf maken, foto's van zero naar hero brengen in Photoshop, werken met focus verloop, achtergronden smooth maken, huid en digitale make-up, kleur manipulatie, automatiseren van retouching processing binnen Photoshop, hyperverscherping, beste plugins en veel meer

 

Zie het gehele programma op www.fotografie-workshops.nl

Inschrijven via info at Frankdoorhof punt com

This full, free video tutorial is now available for you to download and watch! It shows how to create this image, from beginning to end, and it includes the raw files and my luminance mask action set!

 

- I have a small request -

If you've enjoyed my materials and found them useful, please can you share the link below to others who you think will also enjoy them.

 

By doing so you will be helping to support this resource and helping it to grow. The more interest/demand I have in these workflows the more of them I can make.

 

Thank you and I hope enjoy this new video

 

www.throughstrangelenses.com/2013/09/08/full-free-post-pr...

those sand green bricks really got me going:)

Probably the question that I get asked more than any other is about my photography workflow. I actually feel like my photography workflow is pretty simple so I thought I'd write up a brief post documenting my process all the way from photo capture to photo publishing. Feel free to ask any questions if you need me to elaborate on things.

 

1. Step one, capture the image: I carry my Canon 5D and 5 lenses (24mm, 14mm, 50mm, 135mm, 100mm macro) with me in a backpack every where I go. I take advantage of the routine time wasted in a day to turn that time into photography. Walking to and from the BART train. Going out for lunch. Waiting in line somewhere. All kinds of everyday moments become photographic opportunities.

 

Of course I also go out on specific photowalks all the time. Sometimes these are weekend trips away from home, other times they are just evenings out shooting with friends or with my wife. I use 2 8GB SanDisk cards.

 

To learn more about what is in my camera bag you can read this post here.

 

2. Step two, transfer the image to the computer: Here I use a high speed USB card reader. All card readers are not created equal. Spend the extra few bucks and get a high speed reader. Every day or other day I use my card reader to offload images on my camera card to my computer. In my case when I plug in my card reader Canon's "Camera Window" software automatically loads. This software then pulls all of my images off of my CF card and puts them into folders on my computer titled by date taken. After my images are transferred to my MacBook Pro I then put the card back in the camera and delete the images off of it. If I'm on an all day shoot I'll take breaks during my day (coffee, lunnch, etc.) to take a moment and clear out my cards.

 

Bonus Link: 13 Tips for Using and Caring for Memory Cards.

 

3. Step three, sort photos: Here I open the folder that has all of the RAW files from a given day's images using Adobe's Bridge software. I create a subfolder in the dated folder called "maybe." I go through the day's photographs and I drag anything that I think might have potential into the "maybe" folder.

 

4. Step four, first pass processing using Adobe Camera RAW: My next step is to open all images in a day's maybe folder using Adobe Camera RAW (comes with both Photoshop CS3 and Lightroom). You simply select all of the images in your maybe folder, right click, and select "Open in Camera RAW." This is where 95% of my photo processing is done.

 

With camera RAW you can adjust the contrast of a photo, the exposure of a photo, the saturation of a photo. You can adjust the temperature of a photo (the reason why some white lights are sulfur yellow and other white lights are soft blue), you can adjust the vignette (black or white edges around a photo), fill lighting, etc. Adobe Camera RAW uses sliders to make these adjustments and it is easy as pie.

 

After I get an individual image to where I want it I will use the "Save" button in camera RAW to save that finished photo as a JPG in a new folder "Finished Images."

 

After I process my first pass imagery I move that date's archive folder off my Mac and onto my drobo to back it up and store it more safely. Note, none of my RAW files are ever saved as processed. I consider my RAW files my negatives and always want to be able to go back to them and process from scratch if need be.

 

5. Step five, 2nd pass processing: Once I've finished my first pass processing I will point Bridge to the "finished images" folder. Here I will look at each finished JPG image in as large a format as possible looking for photos that need additional work. Typically less than 10% of my photos need additional work beyond camera RAW.

 

The type of work here is all done in Photoshop. As I go through the images I look for a few things consistently. Images that need slight sharpening. Images that have dust spots on them that need to be fixed with the cloning tool in Photoshop. Images that could benefit from dodging or burning, etc. As I see an image in Bridge that needs additional fine tuning I will double click on the image in Photoshop, make my edits, save the file and close it.

 

6. Step six, keywording: My next step is to keyword all of my photos using Adobe Bridge. Adobe Bridge has pretty powerful keywording capabilities. I can batch and bulk keyword photos. I might start out, for instance, keywording every single photo I just processed as "Las Vegas" "DMU Las Vegas Meetup 2008" "Vegas". From there I then might go through sub batches and keyword them (say Caeser's or Wynn or Venetian). From there I might then bulk keyword certain frequently used attributes (neon, mannequin, graffiti, night, etc.). And then I go through each image individually adding any final keywords image by image.

 

Keywording is important because these keywords will be automatically read as tags by sites like Flickr and Zooomr. It also allows you better to search your finished imagery in the future on your computer. The Importance of Keywording Your Photos.

 

7. Step seven, geotagging: Here I use a free program called Geotagger. Geotagger works with Google Earth and allows you to pinpoint a spot on the planet using Google Earth and then drag and drop any images from that location onto the program and geotags them with that coordinate. Geotagger only works for the Mac but there are lots of other free geotagging programs like Geotagger out there that work with Windows. When you geotag your photos at the file level both Flickr and Zooomr automatically add them to the meta data on your photo and place them on their site maps.

 

8. Step eight, sort finished photos into A or B to be uploaded folders: My next step is to go through my imagery and basically sort 80/20. What I feel are my strongest 20% go into a folder "B." The rest go into a folder "C."

 

9. Step nine, publish: I publish twice a day usually but this is by no means a hard and fast rule. Once in the morning and once in the evening. I typically publish 10-15 photos at a time selected mostly at random from my growing pool of "to be uploadeds."

 

I make sure that when I upload these 10 or 15 shots in a batch that the "B" shots are uploaded last as Flickr and Zooomr only highlight the last 5 shots that you upload in an upload batch. I want these to be what I feel are my better images.

 

And that's it. I'm sure that there are more efficient ways that I could be processing my imagery but this has worked for me for a while now. Feel free to ask any questions as the above might sound a bit complicated to some.

 

Additional reading: Thomas Hawk's Principles and Guidelines for the Modern Photowalker . Brian Auer's Your Guide to Adobe Bridge: Useful Tips and Tricks.

 

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